The Vista July 8, 1999

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The Student Voice Since 1903


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On the cover The parking lot west of Old North was ablaze with color from fireworks Sunday, July 4. Crowds gathered all around campus to celebrate freedom in the traditional way. The show was the finale to Edmond's LibertyFest Entertainment began at Wantland stadium at 7:30 p.m. Smilin' Vic and The Soul Monkeys began the show. At 9:15 p.m. the stage show "Randy Whittern and the Sensational Shoes" performed before the holiday crowd. —Staff Photo by Shauna Hardway

Have a view to share? Write a letter to the editor. Letters can be mailed to: The Vista 100 N. University Drive Edmond, OK. 73034 Letters can be sent via e-mail to thevista@hotmail.com

JULY 8, 1999

THEVISTA

Magri!l to pen Edmond opera Vol. 100, No. 58 (USPS 661-700) ISSN: 1084-9149

Editor Stephanie J. Eggeling Managing Editor Jarrod Briley Maria Crane Copy Editor Advertising Mgr Wendy Werber Ad Sales Anna Jeffrey Writer Stacy Brasher Julie Jordan Writer

Trent Dugas Writer Celie Rabalais Writer Eric Spruill Sports Editor Photographer Shauna Hardway Chieko Ham Photographer John Lurry Cartoonist Webmaster Shauna Hardway

Adviser Dr. Terry Clark The Vista is published as a newspaper and public forum by UCO students, semi-weekly during the academic year except exams and holiday periods, and on Thursdays only during the summer term, at the University of Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Dr, Edmond, OK 73034-5209. Telephone: (405) 974-5549. One-year subscription rate $12. Periodicals postage paid at Edmond, Oklahoma 73034-9998. The Vista's Editorial Board meets once a week. Editorials represent the views of the majority of the Editorial Board. Opinion columns, reviews and commentaries represent the views of the writer and not necessarily the views of The Vista Editorial Board, the Department of Journalism, UCO or the Board of Regents of Oklahoma Colleges. Cartoons represent the views of the artist. The Vista is not an official medium expression for the Regents or UCO. "POSTMASTER": Send address changes to The Vista, 100 N. University Drive, Edmond, OK 73034.

LETTERS The Vista encourages letters to the editor. Letters should address issues and ideas, not personalities. Letters must be typed, double-spaced with a maximum of 150 words, include the author's printed name, major, classification and phone number. Non-students must include title and daytime phone number. Letters are subject to editing for libel, clarity and space, or to eliminate statements of questionable taste. The Vista reserves the right not to publish submitted letters and does not publish anonymous letters. Address letters to: Editor, The Vista, 100 N. University Drive, Edmond, OK 73034-5209 or deliver in person to the editor, Communications Bldg, Rm 107. Letters can be sent via e-mail to thevista@hotmail.com . The Vista is online at http://www.libarts.ucok.eduJjournalisn -ilvista.html. This publication is printed by The Edmond Evening Sun, 123 S Broadway, Edmond, OK 73003.

By Celie Rabalais

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StalMiter co

music professor Dr. Samuel Magrill, will represent Oklahoma in the American Composer's Forum Continental Harmony program next year. The Continental program is a collaborative effort between the American Composers' Forum and the National Endowment for the Arts. It will consist of a single performance in each of the 50 states. Magrill said the opera will represent the history of Edmond. It will consist of one act and will be written in conjunction with the Edmond Historical Society.

Magrill has written two previous operas. He also promoted opera through his "Opera in the Schools" project by performing scenes from his operas in local area schools. "Opera transports an audience into a different reality in a way that no other medium can. The costumes, the spectacle and the singing combine to make for a great entertainment experience," Magrill said. "The reaction opera elicits from school children is extraordinary." "I'm just beginning to think about the opera. It will have something to do with Edmond's history and the millennium, and our community's hopes for the future," Magrill said

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JULY 8, 1999

THEVISTA

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UCO music students to jazz up Bricktown By Trent Dugas

StaffWriter co music students

u

will fill Bricktown with the sound of jazz

July 15. A jazz concert will begin at 7 p.m. at the club Birdies in Bricktown. The students will play the jazz concert with four of today's most influential jazz players, said Kent Kidwell, music professor. The concert concludes a three day workshop called UCO Jazz Masters Workshop. The workshop and concert are for UCO music students in the summer jazz program. Top jazz performers were brought to UCO to teach during the workshop and then play in the concert with students. Jazz players Peter Krauss, Will Campbell, David Anderson, Clark Terry and Slide Hampton

will serve as clinicians at the workshop and will then perform with UCO students at the Thursday night concert. Kidwell said the workshop was an added feature that didn't cost music students any more than tuition. He said the Music Department foots the bill to bring in the Jazz talents to UCO.

Kidwell said the purpose of bringing Jazz masters to UCO is to help increase music student's knowledge and to inspire the students. "This is a great workshop for music students and will help prime them for the concert," Kidwell said. Lee Rucker, assistant music

professor, said this year's workshop and concert is centered around improvisation and combo performance. Wrapping up the concert will

be the Edmond Jazz Orchestra, a 20-piece big band that includes UCO faculty and former UCO students who are now professionals.

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JULY 8, 1999

PORTS

UCO basketball player slam dunks athlete of the year award By Eric Spruill

Staiffriter CO hoop star Eddie Robinson has been named the Lone Star Conference Male Athlete of the Year. Robinson, a 6'9", 210pound forward from Flint Mich., wowed crowds with his high flying slam dunks and his ability to hit the three.. wit IN I.

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pointer, became UCO's first player ever to win this award. "It's a great honor; there's a lot of successful athletes in the Lone Star conference. He should be very proud,"said John Seward, Broncho head basketball coach. "He (Robinson) was very talented and very raw when he got here. It was neat watching him develop into a highly successful individual," said IN

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goals made with 305 of his shots this past season. Robinson went over his scoring average of 28 points per game several times; in four games he put up 40 or more points and had nine garries of over 30 points. He was a unanimous firstteam All-American this season. He did more than just score points, as he averaged 9.5 rebounds, 2.2 blocks, 2.2 steals per game and shot 77.2 percent from the free-throw line. Critics who thought NCAA Division II competition was easier to dominate than Division I were silenced by Robinson, who scored 23 points, grabbed six rebounds, collected three steals and dished out two assists in 26 minutes of play at the National Association of Basketball Coaches All-Star game, which featured stars

It's a great honor; there's a lot of successful athletes in the Lone Star conference. —John Seward head basketball coach from Division I and only two players from Division II. Since Robinson entered the NBA draft after his sophomore year he is ineligible to enter it again. When asked when Robinson might sign a freeagent contract with an NBA team Seward said, "Obviously he (Robinson) has an agent and I'm not involved with that, but with the draft being over, I would say he is relatively close to signing a contract, because he has already worked out with everyone he has wanted to." <

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THEVISTA

`Wild, Wild West puts special effects cart before the horse By Julie Jordan

Staff-Wile ,

T

he horizon is an explosion of pink and orange as John Wayne, six-shooters on each hip, rides up to the local saloon and dismounts—his mechanical horse? You won't see any mechanical horses in the new Warner Bros. movie "Wild, Wild West," but horses and actors are the only things lacking an engine. This remake of the 1960s TV show takes place five years after the Civil War ended. Kevin Kline plays inventor/ U.S. Marshal Artemus Gordon, who eventually teams up with special government agent James T. West played by Will Smith. Their mission is to stop Dr. Arlliss Loveless, Kenneth Brannagh, from resurrecting the Confederacy and killing President Ulysses S. Grant. The noticeable difference in this modern western and traditional westerns is the use of James Bond-type gadgets throughout the movie. Pool tables that flip over, billiard balls that explode and a monstrous mechanical tarantula are just a few of the quirky effects that overshadow the weak plot. Hollywood's motto seems to be: Shoot the special effects first and worry about the plot later. Kline, Smith and Brannaugh are excellent actors, but their talent is wasted on a cheesy story and bad jokes. And how can the actors compete with a gigantic hydraulic spider? The director of "Wild, Wild Wes•t," Barry Sonnenfeld, directed Will Smith in 1997's blockbuster "Men in Black." But if you loved "Men in Black," don't go expecting anything similar. "Men in Black" had a better script, jokes that actually worked and special effects that didn't dominate the screen.Westerns should remain

simple. They should whisk us away to a time when television and video games weren't around to pass the time. This is the main reason the special effects in "Wild, Wild West" seem so out of place—because they are. "Wild, Wild West," is entertaining, but just as John Wayne didn't need a mechanical horse, this movie doesn't need the intrusion of the numerous contraptions that pop up throughout it.

"Wild, Wild West" Rating: C

James T. West, played by Will Smith, protects the nation from the evils of Dr. Loveless in Warner Bros. new movie "Wild, Wild West."

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JULY 8, 1999

n this era of violence, gun control may seem a rational

solution — at least that is what liberals would have the American people believe. The theory goes something like this: Make guns, especially handguns, increasingly difficult to obtain legally and violent crimes will be drastically reduced. There are other legislative proposals being discussed on Capitol Hill, but this one seems to be the backbone of the others. Theoretically, if such legislation were to pass, it would inevitably work, causing violent crimes committed with handguns to be drastically reduced. Realistically, criminals who use handguns in crimes would cease using legally obtained handguns to kill people. Instead, they would resort to the tried and true method of stealing them, or purchasing them illegally, and then killing someone. Owning guns is not the problem — the way criminals use them is. Gun control is the lazy solution to more complex issues. What causes people to kill? Is a violent society to blame? Can anything be done to curb violence, other than trespassing on the Second Amendment? Until these questions are answered, it is foolish to assume gun control will accomplish anything.

John Lurry /The Vista

"I don't do weekends." "Because -working part-time at UPS...I don't have to. They have five-day schedules that leave your -weekends free. That is plenty of Time to study or go out with friends. And I make plenty too... almost $10,000 a year working about 4 boars a day. UPS knows students value time as inuelii as money. So If you don't do weekends, do contact UPS. Job positions available in: • Loading and unloading packages United Parcel Service offers: • $8.50 per hour to start • Up to $9.50 per hour after 30 days • 4 hours per day • Full benefits for you and your family (medical, dental & vision) • Advancement Opportunities • Paid vacation

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Columnist says inanimate objects are murderers By Celle Rabalais

StaWriter Guns kill. Well, that's not exactly correct. Bullets kill. Wait, that's not right either. Guns and bullets are inanimate objects. Webster's Dictionary defines inanimate as "not having the qualities of life; not animated." Bullets cannot load themselves into guns and guns cannot pick out victims, aim and squeeze their own triggers. They need a human to do that for them, since they are unable to move on their own. However, anti-gun advocates and politicians debate this fact. They want the public to believe guns kill. Not people. They want to ban guns so the killings will stop. Okay, for the sake of argument, let's agree guns kill and do what anti-gunners want.

Ban guns. But let's take it a few steps further, be politically correct and ban all inanimate things that kill. Knives. Knives kill. I know this for a fact. A knife jumped into a man's hand and forced him to plunge it into the back of my friend, Sandy. I don't know what it had against Sandy. She was only 15 at the time. Lakes. Lakes kill. Cissy, a childhood friend, was swimming in one when it decided to wrap its undercurrent around her body, pulling her under the water. It held her there. Her feeble attempts to free herself from its hold were futile. After a few minutes, the 12- year-old girl lost the battle. Boats. Boats kill. One killed Terry, my exboyfriend, when it overturned

on a fishing trip. It hit him in the head, knocking him unconscious. He slid under the water and drowned. Okay, I admit the boat had an accomplice in the lake. Cars. Cars kill. My cousin, Beverly, was traveling east in hers when a car approaching from the west decided to run head on into her. It smacked her so hard that it knocked the engine of her car into her lap. Matches. Matches kill. Bobby was camping in the

woods when a match started a forest fire at a nearby camp site. The fire quickly engulfed Bullets cannot the area, cutting off all escape load themselves routes and trapping Bobby in his tent. He was identified into guns and from dental records. guns cannot pick The list goes on and on. Ice picks, hammer, axes, out victims, aim screwdrivers, baseball bats, and squeeze their machetes, tire irons, bricks, own triggers. poison, rope, pillows, airplanes, trains and electrical wires can all kill. The list •Ag*MMWMW doesn't end there. It continues want to ban any of those with items too numerous- to objects. Just guns. mention. But the government doesn't Because guns kill. STUDENT SPECIALS

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THEVISTA

JULY 8, 1999 ANKCINONWEONNARrer:1

iMacs to add color in art building By Trent Dugas Staff

T

he art building will soon see a new splash of colors in one of its classrooms, currently being remodeled for graphic design programs. New iMac, multi-colored computers for UCO's graphic design program, are being installed in Room 105 in the art building. The 18 new computers will cost more than $26,000. Money to fund the new computers for the lab comes from the student technology fee that all students pay each semester. The current graphic design computer lab in the Liberal Arts building will become an open lab for students working on liberal art studies. Keith Bowden, director of education technologies for the Liberal Arts department, is

planning and coordinating the efforts to buy the new equipment. He also teaches graphic art courses at UCO. The new graphic design lab will open in the fall semester. Bowden said the lab will be a premier work space for graphic design students. Also being remodeled is Room 107 of the art building. Room 105 and 107 will be designed and remodeled so the computers can interact with each other. William Wallo, associate professor of visual art and design, said it was vital that the graphic delign lab and the multi-media lab be able to interact with each other. Multi-media consists of electronic delivery issues, lab related design issues, desktop video, programming and interfacing with graphic design still images.

—Staff Photo by Chieko Hara

Tickling the ivories... 16-year-old Chinese piano prodigy Li Yundi performed June 29 at Mitchell Hall. Yundi, who is a student at the Shenzhen Arts School in China, has won several piano competitions worldwide. The recital was part of a cultural exchange between China and the U.S.

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